esportiva bet:
Animals
Life
More Stories in Life
-
esportiva bet: Animals
Gett♎ing wild mosquitoes back to the lab alive takes a custom backpack
The new low-tech transportation method could help scientists in Africa assess if malaria-carrying mosquitoes are resistant to a common insecticide. -
esportiva bet: Animals
This snake goes to extremes♛ to play dead — and it appears to pay off
When dice snakes fake their death to avoid predators, those that use a combination of blood, poop and musk spend less time pretending to be dead. -
esportiva bet: Neuroscience
Lampreys have ‘fight or flight’ cells, challenging ideas about 🌞nervous system evolution
The discovery of sympathetic nervous system cells in lampreys draws a closer tie between the animal and complex vertebrates — such as humans. -
esportiva bet: Animals
Want to see butterflies in your b𒐪ackyard? Try doing l༺ess yardwork
Growing out patches of grass can lure adult butterflies and moths with nectar and offer lawn mower–free havens for toddler caterpillars. -
esportiva bet: Animals
This orangutan u🎉sed a medicinal plant🎃 on his face wound
Rakus the orangutan appeared to be treating a cut to his face with a plant that’s also used in traditional human medicine. -
esportiva bet: Animals
Belugas may communicate by warpi🌺ng a blob o🌄f forehead fat
Jiggling the “melon” like Jell-O seems to be associated with sexual behaviors, scientists say. -
esportiva bet: Environment
A newꦑ approach to fighting wildfires combines local knowledge and AI
Land managers in the western United States are using potential operational delineations, or PODS, to prepare for — and take advantage of — wildfires. -
esportiva bet: Animals
Ximena Velez-Li🔯en🍌do is saving Andean bears with honey
By training beekeepers, biologist Ximena Velez-Liendo is helping rural agricultural communities of southern Bolivia coexist with Andean bears. -
esportiva bet: Health & Medicine
Traces of bird flu are showing up in cow milk. Here’s what to🌸 know
We asked the experts: Should people be worried? Pasteurization and the H5N1 virus’s route to infection suggests risks to people remains low.